Lilith - définition. Qu'est-ce que Lilith
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Lilith - définition

FIGURE IN JEWISH MYTHOLOGY
Lillith; Lilis; Lilit; Lilith (Qliphoth); Biblical "LiIith"; Lilitu; Adam's first wife; User:OJDriscoll/Link1; Kisikillillake; Kisikililake
  • [[Burney Relief]], Babylon (1800–1750 BC)
  • ''The Fall of Man'' by [[Cornelis van Haarlem]] (1592), showing the serpent in the Garden of Eden as a woman
  • [[Adam]] clutches a child in the presence of the child-snatcher Lilith. Fresco by [[Filippino Lippi]], basilica of [[Santa Maria Novella]], Florence
  • Photographic reproduction of the [[Great Isaiah Scroll]], which contains a reference to plural ''liliyyot''
  • [[Incantation bowl]] with an [[Aramaic]] inscription around a demon, from [[Nippur]], Mesopotamia, 6–7th century
  • ''[[Lady Lilith]]'' by [[Dante Gabriel Rossetti]] (1866–1868, 1872–1873)
  • ''[[Lamia]]'' (first version) by [[John William Waterhouse]], 1905
  • ''Lilith'', illustration by Carl Poellath from 1886 or earlier
  • Medieval Hebrew amulet intended to protect a mother and her child from Lilith
  • ''[[Faust]] and Lilith'' by [[Richard Westall]] (1831)

Lilith         
<computer> The workstation for which Modula-2 was developed as the system language. [Details?] (1995-10-25)
Lilith         
Lilith (; ) is a female figure in Mesopotamian and Judaic mythology, alternatively the first wife of Adam and supposedly the primordial she-demon. Lilith is cited as having been "banished" from the Garden of Eden for not complying with and obeying Adam.
Lilith (novel)         
1895 NOVEL BY GEORGE MACDONALD
Lilith (Novel)
Lilith is a fantasy novel by Scottish writer George MacDonald, first published in 1895. It was reprinted in paperback by Ballantine Books as the fifth volume of the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series in September 1969.

Wikipédia

Lilith

Lilith ( LIH-lith; Hebrew: לִילִית, romanized: Līlīṯ), also spelt Lilit, Lilitu, or Lilis, is a female figure in Mesopotamian and Judaic mythology, theorized to be the first wife of Adam and supposedly the primordial she-demon. Lilith is cited as having been "banished" from the Garden of Eden for not complying with and obeying Adam. She is thought to be mentioned in Biblical Hebrew in the Book of Isaiah, and in Late Antiquity in Mandaean mythology and Jewish mythology sources from 500 CE onward. Lilith appears in historiolas (incantations incorporating a short mythic story) in various concepts and localities that give partial descriptions of her. She is mentioned in the Babylonian Talmud (Eruvin 100b, Niddah 24b, Shabbat 151b, Baba Bathra 73a), in the Book of Adam and Eve as Adam's first wife, and in the Zohar Leviticus 19a as "a hot fiery female who first cohabited with man". Many traditional rabbinic authorities, including Maimonides and Menachem Meiri, reject the existence of Lilith.

The name Lilith stems from lilû, lilîtu, and (w)ardat lilî). The Akkadian word lilu is related to the Hebrew word lilith in Isaiah 34:14, which is thought to be a night bird by some modern scholars such as Judit M. Blair. In the Ancient Mesopotamian religion, found in cuneiform texts of Sumer, Assyria, and Babylonia Lilith signifies a spirit or demon.

Lilith continues to serve as source material in today's popular culture, Western culture, literature, occultism, fantasy, and horror.

Exemples du corpus de texte pour Lilith
1. "This is also what happened to Lilith," Kahat explains.
2. Or is she the Lilith of the latkes, ready to pour bread sauce over your vermicelli?
3. "She became more popular than Eve." According to talmudic literature, Lilith was Adam‘s first wife and his equal.
4. This may matter little to fans hungry for light piano and guitar ditties laid beneath Lilith Fair–esque musings.
5. "She‘s the anti–wonk, the anti–intellectual, someone who doesn‘t want to brook differences of opinion," said Susan Weidman Schneider, the editor of Lilith, another Jewish feminist journal.